Literae Cantuarienses: the letter books of the Monastery of Christ Church, Canterbury, Del 3H.M. Stationery Office, 1889 |
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Angliæ Arch Archbishop Archiepiscopi Beatæ Mariæ bishop bury cantariæ cantariam Canter Canterbury Capellani Capellanus capitulari Capitulum Cart Chapter Christ Church Church Collegii Conventus cujus rei dicta dictæ dicti hospitalis dicto dioecesis Domini Regis Dominus Ecclesiæ Christi Cantuariensis Ecclesiæ nostræ Edwardi eisdem first good great grete hæc Hansa hath have Henry Hibernia hiis hujusmodi imperpetuum ipsius Item Johannes John juxta King King's Kyng Kynges letters lettres litteras Lord Lorde made make MCCC mensis Monastery necnon nostris nostrum omnibus præ prædicti prædictorum prædictum præfato præmissis præsentes præsenti præsentibus Prior Prioris Priour and Convent quæ regni Ricardi Richard ryght salutem same Sancti Sancti Augustini sayd sayde schall seid seid Priour shuld sine sive suæ successores successoribus suche super tempore terræ ther Thomæ Thomas thys tunc tyme unto vestræ vobis Westmonasterium whiche Willelmi Willelmus year your youre yowr Grace
Populære avsnitt
Side 470 - ILLUSTRATIVE OF THE WARS OF THE ENGLISH IN FRANCE DURING THE REIGN OF HENRY THE SIXTH, KING OF ENGLAND. Vol. I., and Vol. II. (in Two Parts). Edited by the Rev. JOSEPH STEVENSON, MA, of University College, Durham, and Vicar of Leighton Buzzard. 23. THE ANGLO-SAXON CHRONICLE, ACCORDING TO THE SEVERAL ORIGINAL AUTHORITIES. Vol. I., Original Texts. Vol. II., Translation. Edited by BENJAMIN THORPE, Esq., Member of the Royal Academy of Sciences at Munich, and of the Society of Netherlandish Literature...
Side 468 - MONASTERII S. AUGUSTINI CANTUARIENSIS, by THOMAS OF ELMHAM, formerly Monk and Treasurer of that Foundation. Edited by CHARLES HARDWICK, MA, Fellow of St. Catharine's Hall, and Christian Advocate in the University of Cambridge.
Side 468 - CUM TRITICO. Ascribed to THOMAS NETTER, of WALDEN, Provincial of the Carmelite Order in England, and Confessor to King Henry the Fifth. Edited by the Rev. WW SHIRLEY, MA, Tutor and late Fellow of Wadham College, Oxford.
Side 469 - Rome, in the year 681, and continues the history down to the subjugation of Wales by Edward I., about the year 1282. 18. A COLLECTION OF ROYAL AND HISTORICAL LETTERS DURING THE REIGN OF HENRY IV. 1399-1404. Edited by the Rev. FC HINGESTON, MA, of Exeter College, Oxford. 1860.
Side 470 - Yorkshire. 1861-1868. The first three volumes contain the historical works of Gerald du Barry, who lived in the reigns of Henry II., Richard I., and John, and attempted to reestablish the independence of Wales by restoring the see of St. Davids to its ancient primacy. His works are of a very miscellaneous nature, both in prose and verse, and are remarkable chiefly for the racy and original anecdotes which they contain relating to contemporaries. He is the only Welsh writer of any importance who has...
Side 473 - I. They had their origin in a dispute which arose from the attempts of Baldwin and Hubert, archbishops of Canterbury, to found a college of secular canons, a project which gave great umbrage to the monks of Canterbury, who saw in it a design to supplant them in their function of metropolitan chapter. These letters are printed, for the first time, from a MS. belonging to the archiepiscopal library at Lambeth.
Side 469 - Y TYWYSOGION ; or, The Chronicle of the Princes of "Wales. Edited by the Rev. JOHN WILLIAMS AB ITHEL, MA 1860. This work, also known as " The Chronicle of the Princes of Wales," has been attributed to Caradoc of Llancarvan, who nourished about the middle of the twelfth century.
Side 471 - The object of this work is to publish notices of all known sources of British history, both printed and imprinted, in one continued sequence. The materials, when historical (as distinguished from biographical), are arranged under the year in which the latest event is recorded in the chronicle or history, and not under the period in which its author, real or supposed, flourished. Biographies...
Side 467 - Eolls had in view was to form a corpus historicum within reasonable limits, and which should be as complete as possible. In a subject of so vast a range, it was important that the historical student should be able to select such volumes as conformed with his own peculiar tastes and studies, and not be put to the expense of purchasing the whole collection ; an inconvenience inseparable from any other plan than that which has been in this instance adopted.